Issue 7, 2014

A time resolved metabolomics study: the influence of different carbon sources during growth and starvation of Bacillus subtilis

Abstract

In its natural environment, the soil, the Gram-positive model bacterium Bacillus subtilis frequently encounters nutrient limitation and other stress factors. Efficient adaptation mechanisms are necessary to cope with this wide range of environmental challenges. The ability to utilize diverse carbon sources represents a key adaptation process that allows B. subtilis to thrive in its natural habitat. To gain a comprehensive insight into the metabolism of B. subtilis, global metabolite analyses were performed during growth with glucose alone or glucose with either malate, fumarate or citrate as carbon/energy sources. Furthermore, to achieve a comprehensive coverage of a wide range of chemically different metabolites, complementary GC-MS, LC-MS and 1H-NMR analyses were applied. This study reveals that the availability of different carbon sources results in different extracellular metabolite profiles whereas a regulated intracellular metabolite equilibrium was observed. In addition, the typical energy-starvation induced activation of the general stress sigma factor σB was only observed upon entry into the stationary phase with glucose or glucose and malate as carbon sources.

Graphical abstract: A time resolved metabolomics study: the influence of different carbon sources during growth and starvation of Bacillus subtilis

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Feb 2014
Accepted
25 Mar 2014
First published
25 Mar 2014

Mol. BioSyst., 2014,10, 1812-1823

Author version available

A time resolved metabolomics study: the influence of different carbon sources during growth and starvation of Bacillus subtilis

H. Meyer, H. Weidmann, U. Mäder, M. Hecker, U. Völker and M. Lalk, Mol. BioSyst., 2014, 10, 1812 DOI: 10.1039/C4MB00112E

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